2000 in Australian literature
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 2000.
- Drylands by Thea Astley and Benang by Kim Scott were joint winners of the Miles Franklin Award
Major publications
Literary fiction
- Peter Carey — True History of the Kelly Gang
- Arabella Edge — The Company: The Story of a Murderer
- Rodney Hall — The Day We Had Hitler Home
- Rosalie Ham — The Dressmaker
- Thomas Keneally
- Colleen McCullough — Morgan's Run
- Alex Miller — Conditions of Faith
- Frank Moorhouse — Dark Palace
- Morris West — The Last Confession
Crime and mystery
- Jon Cleary — Bear Pit
- Catherine Jinks — The Notary[1]
- Dorothy Johnston — The Trojan Dog
- Andrew McGahan — Last Drinks
- Barry Maitland — Silvermeadow[2]
- Shane Maloney — The Big Ask[3]
- Andrew Masterson — The Second Coming
- Caroline Shaw — Eye to Eye
- Peter Temple — Dead Point
- Meredith Webber — Trust Me[4]
Science fiction and fantasy
- Sara Douglass — The Nameless Day
- Michel Faber — Under the Skin
- Jennifer Fallon — Medalon
- Kate Forsyth — The Forbidden Land[5]
- Ian Irvine — The Last Albatross
- Juliet Marillier — Son of the Shadows
- Sean McMullen — The Miocene Arrow
- Garth Nix
- Emily Rodda — The Forests of Silence
- Kim Wilkins — The Resurrectionists
- Sean Williams and Shane Dix — The Dying Light[6]
Children's and young adult fiction
- Jaclyn Moriarty — Feeling Sorry for Celia
- Sonya Hartnett — Thursday's Child
- James Moloney — Touch Me
- John Marsden — Winter
- Shaun Tan — The Lost Thing
- Markus Zusak — Fighting Ruben Wolfe
Short story anthologies
- Carmel Bird (editor) — The Penguin Century of Australian Stories[7]
Poetry
- Rosemary Dobson – Untold Lives and Later Poems[8]
- Brook Emery — and dug my fingers in the sand[9]
- Dorothy Hewett and John Kinsela — Wheatlands[10]
- John Mateer – Barefoot Speech[11]
- Mark Reid – Parochial[12]
- Arthur M. Spyrou – The Garden of Delights[13]
Plays
- Hannie Rayson — Life After George[14]
- David Williamson
Non-fiction
- Bill Bryson — Down Under
- Brian Matthews — A Fine and Private Place[15]
- Wendy McCarthy — Don't Fence Me In[16]
- Margaret Scott — Changing Countries: On moving from one island to another[17]
Awards and honours
- Ray Parkin, AM, "for service to Australian war literature through autobiographical works, and to historical research as author of HM Bark Endeavour[18]
Lifetime achievement
| Award | Author |
|---|---|
| Christopher Brennan Award[19] | J. S. Harry |
| Patrick White Award[20] | Thomas Shapcott |
Literary
Fiction
International
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commonwealth Writers' Prize[25] | Best Novel, SE Asia and South Pacific region | Lily Brett | Too Many Men | Picador |
National
Crime and Mystery
National
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ned Kelly Award[34] | ||||
| Novel | Peter Temple | Shooting Star | Bantam Books | |
| First novel | Marshall Browne | The Wooden Leg of Inspector Anders | Duffy & Snellgrove | |
| True crime | John Dale | Huckstepp: A Dangerous Life | Allen & Unwin | |
| Andrew Rule & John Silvester | Underbelly 3 | Floradale Productions & Sly Ink | ||
| Lifetime Achievement | Not awarded | |||
Children and Young Adult
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children's Book of the Year Award[35] | Older Readers | Nick Earls | 48 Shades of Brown | Penguin Books |
| Picture Book | Margaret Wild & Anne Spudvilas | Jenny Angel | Viking Books | |
| New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[30] | Children's Literature | Steven Herrick | The Spangled Drongo | University of Queensland Press |
| Young People's Literature | Meme McDonald and Boori Monty Pryor | The Binna-Binna Man | Allen & Unwin | |
| Victorian Premier's Prize for Young Adult Fiction[32] | Helen Barnes | Killing Aurora | Penguin |
Poetry
| Award | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature[26] | Dimitris Tsaloumas | The Harbour | University of Queensland Press |
| The Age Book of the Year[21] | Peter Minter | Empty Texas | Paper Bark Press |
| Anne Elder Award[36] | Arthur M. Spyrou | The Garden of Delights | Monogene |
| Grace Leven Prize for Poetry[37] | Not awarded | ||
| Mary Gilmore Award[38] | Lucy Dougan | Memory Shell | Five Islands Press |
| New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[30] | Jennifer Maiden | Mines | Paper Bark Press |
| Victorian Premier's Literary Awards[32] | John Millett | Iceman | Five Islands Press |
| Western Australian Premier's Book Awards[33] | Mark Reid | Parochial | Fremantle Arts Centre Press |
Drama
| Award | Category | Author | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards[30] | FilmScript | Melina Marchetta | Looking for Alibrandi |
| Play | Daniel Keene | Scissors, Paper, Rock | |
| Victorian Premier's Literary Awards[32] | Drama | Hannie Rayson | Life After George |
| Patrick White Playwrights' Award[39] | Ben Ellis | Who Are You, Mr James? | |
| Bette Guy | Three Men - Three Chairs | ||
| Ailsa Piper | Small Mercies | ||
Non-fiction
| Award | Category | Author | Title | Publisher |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature[26] | Non-Fiction | Tim Flannery | Throw'im Way Leg: An Adventure | Text Publishing |
| The Age Book of the Year[21] | Non-Fiction | Kim Mahood | Craft for a Dry Lake | Anchor |
| National Biography Award[40] | Biography | Peter Robb | M, a biography of European painter Caravaggio | Duffy and Snellgrove |
| Mandy Sayer | Dreamtime Alice: A Memoir | Random House | ||
| Victorian Premier's Literary Awards[32] | Non-Fiction | Adrian Caesar | The White | Picador |